Transcript
Page 1: “Incumbent performance and electoral control”

Research Paper by John Ferejohn

“INCUMBENT PERFORMANCE AND ELECTORAL CONTROL”

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BACKGROUND TO PAPER• Pure theory of electoral competition based on idea that citizens

compare the platforms of two candidates and vote for the preferred

• Strategies of the candidates are represented by promises of future performance in office

• Models have been created based on these assumptions, in both static and dynamic settings

• Models of these sort possess the property that if the set of alternatives is “large enough” equilibrium platforms rarely exist

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• Does not consider differing preferences between the politician and his constituents

• It is assumed that promises will be kept by the officeholder

• A discipline mechanism may be set in place to make sure promises are kept

STATIC MODELS [MCKELVEY (1975)]

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• Assumes that any challenger will propose a platform that will defeat the incumbent

• Incumbent assumes he will lose the next election

• Voters recognize that any rational challenger’s platform would ignore their preferences while in office

DYNAMIC MODELS [KRAMER (1977)]

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PURPOSE OF PAPERPrevious models show that there is no predictable connection between voter preferences and public policy

• Author constructs a dynamic model where:

1. Electorate bases their vote on officeholder’s performance

2. Officeholder anticipates this behavior and chooses their policies

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PURPOSE OF PAPER (CONT.)

• Empirical evidence shows that the pure theory of elections only partially describes electoral behavior

• Recent data shows:

• Voters respond to the performance of incumbents and to promises of competing candidates

• Economic performance is relevant to the reelection of the incumbent

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ASSUMPTIONS OF THE MODEL

• Voters assume officeholder will act in their own interests while in office

• Voters will maximize their own welfare subject to the constraint that officeholders will pursue their own self-interest

• Voter behavior is constrained by the fact that it must be in the best interest of the voters at that time

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• Simple dynamic model only contains one voter (homogeneous electorate) and two or more candidates

• Analyzes the variation in electoral behavior

• Nonhomogeneous model contains several voters and changes the situation significantly

• Vote based on an aggregate criterion rather than individualistic

MODELS DEVELOPED IN THE PAPER

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MODEL WITH HOMOGENEOUS ELECTORATE • Voters have more control over officeholders if the value of office is high

• Officeholder is imperfectly monitored by members of the electorate

• Conclusion will hold up in more sophisticated models assuming disinterest in party reputations

In a two party system:

• Losing office is not as significant as it would be in a multiparty system so officeholders place less value in interests of electors

• Voter control is decreased if parties cannot distinguish themselves

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MODEL WITH NONHOMOGENEOUS ELECTORATE

• Because of differing voter preferences the incumbent is uncontrollable by the electorate

• Rational individual behavior will lead to an undesirable outcome which will arise in any model in which voter preferences are sufficiently diverse

• Potential exploitation by the incumbent leads voters to adopt “sociotropic” rules

• Voting based on aggregate performance

• Thus, induce the incumbent to provide the same level of service as in the homogenous model

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CONCLUSION• Simple model allows retrospective voting based on incumbent’s

performance

• Complex model requires electorate refusal to vote selfishly

• Further ideas to explore:

• Development of “sociotropic” rules

• Collusion between incumbent and challengers


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